Julies needs caves and rockwork to spawn and raise their fry. Callochromis like a bare sandy bottom, but may be hard to find. I think breeding a group of shelldwellers would be the most interesting option.oh, maybe I might replace the cyprichromis with a Julie species, and the xenotilapia with a callochromis pleurospilis. Are these bottom dwellers?
Not in such a small tank, in my opinion. Many years ago, Paul Loiselle, who was in charge of the New York Aquarium, told me that the exhibit which got the most attention from their visitors was not the gars or piranhas, it was a small tank with a colony of N. multifasciatus - people were fascinated by the way that the adults and broods of fry with different sizes went into and out of their shells, sometimes digging in the sand or looking for food or displaying to each other. They are very little trouble to look after, provided you are prepared to hatch some Artemia from time to time, provide some small frozen food and do your basic maintenance regularly.could I have all three?
Difficult in such a small tank with any 2 species of cichlid. You might try an Altolamprologus species, they look fierce - but they really aren't. There is a very small variety of A. compressiceps called 'Sumbu' which is also a shelldweller, which might be ideal if you put extra shells in different parts of the tank. If you can get small specimens of the larger forms of compressiceps or calvus, they will grow rather slowly and live in your tank for some while, but they are rather more delicate than most Lamprologines so they need extra care compared to some Tanganyikans.I want like a community, with probably just 1 other species.
Of course you can start like that, and you might be able to keep it like for a little while if you start with very small fishes. But I am almost certain you will end up with one breeding pair of Julies and the rest dead (unless all the Julies are the same sex - when you might end up with just one individual). That's not the fault of Julies, their survival in the wild depends on finding and holding a suitable rocky territory to raise their fry. It's not fair to keep them if you can't provide this - and it's not fair to keep other fishes in such a small tank that they can't help triggering the Julies' territorial instincts. You might keep a pair of Julies and some shelldwellers in a larger tank, if the Julies are small and the shelldwellers are larger ones like N. brevis but it could still be risky.can I have the multies, have some rock work in the back and have two species of julies, maybe...
2 multies
4 julies from two different species
One corydora, the neon tetra and several Guppies have passed away during the last couple weeks due to old age.I have a freshwater tank with 6 empire Gudgeons, 10 Guppies, 2 bronze Corydoras and a lone neon Tetra.
I also have a reef tank with 2 clownfish and a sand sifting starfish. There are various corals including zoanthids, rachodactis, hammer corals, cyclosera, tachyopyllia, gorgonians, gonipora and sinularia.
a torch coral I rescued from the fish shop as it was very sick.
How many gallons are your tanks?One corydora, the neon tetra and several Guppies have passed away during the last couple weeks due to old age.However in the freshwater tank I have added several swordtails, three rhadinocentrus ornatus, one platy and around 10 more empire Gudgeons. In the saltwater tank I have also recently gotten a purple fire fish, a coral handed shrimp, two scolymia, loads more zoanthids, a hammer coral, a torch coral I rescued from the fish shop as it was very sick and two more gonioporas.
My freshwater tank is 65L. My marine tank display is 120L while the sump is around 40L putting the entire system at around 180L.How many gallons are your tanks?
One if it's head was dead the other remaining three were very bleached. The bleaching has significantly reduced to the point where now only the tips of the tentacles are white on two heads. The two heads are recovering quite well however I don't think they will ever fully recover. One head however is very sick and I think it will unfortunately die in the near future.Curious, do you know what was wrong with it? And how is it doing?
One if it's head was dead the other remaining three were very bleached. The bleaching has significantly reduced to the point where now only the tips of the tentacles are white on two heads. The two heads are recovering quite well however I don't think they will ever fully recover. One head however is very sick and I think it will unfortunately die in the near future.
Here's a picture of the coral in its current state:
What coral do you have? Also what freshwater species do you keep?Yes, but not much to speak of, a Yellow Tang and Half Blue Damsel with a few coral polyps is all I currently have.
Still keep freshwater too.
Thanks! I need to find time with my parents to take advantage of the dollar per gallon sale.@ZooBinh the only way to avoid aggression in a tank as small as a ten gallon would be to overstock the tank. This would mean heavily over filtering the tank and doing frequent water changes. You will also need to provide ample hiding spots, at the very least one per fish. It's probably not worth the work. If you really want to keep those three species you should upgrade to a larger tank or get three different tanks. Maybe you could get another two tanks during a sale such as the dollar per gallon sale. Good luck!
What coral do you have? Also what freshwater species do you keep?